Lore question: Do the Craftworld Eldar have an economy?

So I picked up the Path of the Seer yesterday, and plowed through Path of the Warrior last year. And as could be expected of a series that presents a VERY rare glimpse into the inner society of a race that is literally alien to ours, it has me asking questions beyond "do these characters survive to the next book?"

The first thing that caught my interest is Thirianna's brief time on the Path of the Poet. By her own admission, and confirmed by Korlandril, no one else sees her poems, they sit in a shelf in her house. Largely because it's part of a therapy exercise, but that's beside the point; the relevant thing is that she has no source of direct income. She's not selling them, nor does it seem to be a hobby in her free time.

This got me asking: do the Eldar have a Star-Trek style money-less society? Where anything anyone could want -- food, housing, provisions -- is in ample supply thanks to matter replicators? Or is Thirianna just living off her pension checks from her service as a Dire Avenger?

I started thinking back through PotW for anything else to support this hypothesis. Personal transportation in a craftworld is achieved through a glorified bikeshare (Carshare?). I also don't remember the Striking Scorpions needing to pay for their food at a food court, but that might just need a reread

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The Craftworld Eldar are living in a society best described as post-scarcity. They have the technology to make sure that the processes for everyday living are taken care of so that no-one has to work or wants for food, clothing etc. While this is stated in the Eldar Codices, unfortunately there isn't ever much in the way of detail as to what these processes are. Given that the Exodites distrust the ways of the Craftworlders as decadent and too close to the old life of the pre-Fall Eldar, w can extrapolate without too much of a stretch that they don't have to till the soil, herd animals or perform any kind of manual labour. Unless they want to. A Craftworld Eldar can use the Path to concentrate on personal development, which is its purpose; that is why they might spend a whole Path on poems no-one will ever see

I'd suggest a high degree of very efficient automation as well as complex recycling processes that utilise whole bio-systems to do so, as they have whole continent-sized spaces to play with here Added to the fact that the Eldar can crate items with psychic power, there are a couple of things that it's hard to quantify but that I think we can use to say that they have ways of simply not having to worry about where the next meal is coming from. People who want to cook can do so, and if they are celebrated then people will want to eat what they make - rather like Cisco's father in Deep Space Nine (is that right? It's been a while since I've seen it) who has a restaurant because he likes to cook, rather than to earn a wage.

Informally, because I don't think it ever states it anywhere in official GW books, I always took it that when playing Eldar great works of art and the artisans who made them were celebrated and their work in demand, but they were not paid except in accolades. Eldar might trade such things of abstract value for other such items, or less tangible things such as performances.

They have the technology to make sure that the processes for everyday living are taken care of so that no-one has to work or wants for food, clothing etc. While this is stated in the Eldar Codices, unfortunately there isn't ever much in the way of detail as to what these processes are.

Same with Necrons here, though I would also be interested in such things for eldar. Unfortunately, since not only is culture and such not apart of "muh grimdark" and "muh only war", relegating it to who cares land for GW, it also isn't about the speee muhreens or other humans, so Geedubs double doesn't care about it.

I have never heard specific about the economy in the Eldar society, but have noted some references to it while was reading the trilogy "Path of the Eldar" and have even found them now.

She found Aradryan waiting beside a jewellery stall, picking through an assortment of plain gold earrings. ... ‘Then it is decided,’ said Aradryan, recovering his composure. The steersman signalled his desire to take the jewellery to the stallholder, who nodded his head in appreciation of a choice well made and waved for the pair to continue on their way.

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...she found a small vendor offering a variety of hot confectionery.

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However, straightforward mentions of some kind of currency or payments have never beed encountered by me. We receive only nebulous impression about activities of such vendors and stallholders and can not form an opinion basing on such examples.